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Disturbed Afghan mass grave site must be secured: rights group

British soldier killed by enemy fire in Afghanistan: ministry
A British soldier died in troubled southern Afghanistan on Monday as a result of enemy fire, the defence ministry said. The soldier from 29 Commando Royal Artillery was at a forward operating base in the Gereshk area of Helmand province when he was wounded, the Ministry of Defence said in a statement. He was taken by helicopter to the International Security Assistance Force (ISAF) military hospital at Kandahar but died of his wounds. His next of kin have been informed. The death comes after four British marines were killed in two separate explosions in the Sangin area of Helmand on Friday. It brings to 133 the total number of British service personnel killed in Afghanistan since 2001, when US-led forces ousted the Taliban in the wake of the September 11 attacks in New York and Washington. "The death of this soldier is another hard blow to everyone at Task Force Helmand," said army spokeswoman Commander Paula Rowe. "Our loss is nothing though compared to that of his family and friends, and our thoughts and prayers are with them at this dreadful time." Britain has around 8,000 troops in Afghanistan as part of the NATO-led ISAF. They are largely based in Helmand, where they are battling Taliban insurgents.
by Staff Writers
Washington (AFP) Dec 15, 2008
A US-based rights group called on Monday for NATO to secure a mass grave in northern Afghanistan that has been disturbed.

The Dasht-e-Leili site is suspected of having held up to 2,000 Taliban prisoners, according to Physicians for Human Rights (PHR), which discovered the grave in 2002 and has performed autopsies on some of the bodies.

In July 2008, an expert from the Boston-based group found two large holes three meters (10 feet) deep in the ground, a possible attempt to remove evidence of alleged killings.

The United Nations confirmed the disturbance following a McClatchy Newspapers report last week of three new holes at the site dug up in November.

"We demand that the site be immediately secured and protected around the clock ... it very possibly contained evidence of a major war crime," said PHR deputy director Susannah Sirkin, indicating the group had asked for NATO's International Security Assistance Force (ISAF) to help secure the area.

The prisoners suffocated to death while being transported in sealed cargo containers after surrendering in November 2001, shortly before the fall of the Taliban, according to a Department of State report.

The US-allied Northern Alliance, a group of anti-Taliban Afghan fighters, was transiting the prisoners.

Friday, PHR called for an investigation in Afghanistan and the United States to determine whether Afghan warlord General Abdul Rahim Dostum, a Northern Alliance strongman and US ally in the "war on terror," had overseen the alleged atrocities.

In asking ISAF commander US General David McKiernan to protect the site, Sirkin claimed the United States "has some responsibility" in the matter.

"Also, the US bears a minimum responsibility for ensuring the protection of prisoners who have been captured and imprisoned by its allies," said Sirkin.

"We don't know if American forces were at the site or present when these people died, but we do know that they were present during the surrender and the handover of the prisoners."

The United Nations pledged Monday it would help Afghan authorities secure the site but the international body does not have security forces in the war-torn country.

"PHR is gratified that the UN is calling for the site to be protected, and that they have pledged to assist Afghan authorities in that crucial task," said PHR CEO Frank Donaghue in a statement. "However, full protection of the grave will be dependent upon NATO forces being given the mandate to preserve any remaining evidence and safeguard any surviving witnesses."

The group also asked the US government to provided a declassified analysis of the satellite imagery of the site from November 2001 to present, and make the images available to the Afghan government, the United Nations and the US Congress.

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Russian general says US plans bases in Central Asia: report
Moscow (AFP) Dec 16, 2008
Russia's military chief accused the United States on Tuesday of planning to set up new military bases in ex-Soviet Central Asia, an oil-rich region that Moscow views as its backyard, Interfax reported.







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